HOW companies, private equity firms, and commercial lenders can out-perform their competitors with this study includes:

Best-in-Class screening of new investment/acquisition proposals for fit with categories having acceptable operating profit margins

Using PROVEN profitability “norms” in the category of interest to cross-check projections for start-ups, turnarounds, and changes in strategic direction

Unique de-risking of investment decisions by understanding the stability of category structure: how likely are current levels of profitability to be maintained, increase, or decrease?

Identification of attractive “White Space” opportunities to support brand extension and new product development assessments. For example……

It is clear with this study WHY McDonalds has targeted their entry into retail grocery with coffee with their McCafe brand.

We can also see WHY Coke can be expected to rapidly enter the US retail grocery business with their own ready-to drink coffees (or even more likely, acquired brands or partnerships), following their $5 billion acquisition last year in Europe of the Costa coffee company

It is less clear if the Pepsi-Starbucks ready-to-drink coffee alliance in the US will be maintained in light of the Nestle-Starbucks grocery marketing arrangement: if not, Pepsi will need its own “play” in the category

Modeling competitors’ likely sources of profitability from adjacent categories, and their ability to aggressively defend or attack based on their overall portfolio strength.

This one-of-a-kind study is based on fundamental economics to understand the challenges facing retailers and restaurants as they respond to consumers’ need for convenience in an increasingly digital economy. We use precise data to inform our market size and growth projections, identify what approaches are most likely to succeed, and understand the strategic drivers of market participants. Studies from other firms focus on a description of WHAT is occurring, and are unable to take a perspective on WHY the industry is evolving.

The study makes clear:

WHAT is at stake: a maximum convenience value of $100 billion annually in avoided shopping time driven by internet-enabled platforms; of which $20-$30 billion is the “sweet spot” for large grocery chains.

WHY the operating cost models of large grocery retailers and, for many, their delivery partners such as Instacart and Door Dash, must be lower than $20/hour to be relevant for same day orders.

HOW large grocery retailers with $150 billion invested in real estate/buildings/warehouses/fixtures will seek to protect and leverage their asset bases (they will not walk away!)

Large grocery retailers are at risk of seeing up to 15% of groceries purchased over the internet by 2025, and they are building next day delivery systems to fulfill orders taken over their own portals.

AMAZON’S strategy: it collects approximately $12 billion annually ($5-$6 billion in the U.S.) in Prime Membership subscription fees annually, and their acquisition of Whole Foods should be looked at primarily through this prism.

Amazon with an estimated 65 million “Amazon Prime” members in the US (and 100 million worldwide) are in the center of the target households with convenience needs, with average family income over $100,000.

The meal kit industry is not robust, and could well level off at $4 billion to $5 billion annually with a half dozen survivors. And a significant portion of sales realized through grocery chain placements. They do not offer sufficient convenience versus alternatives.

Fully prepared meals, either hot and ready-to-eat, and sourced from restaurants and in-store delis are on-trend and competitive on price with meal kits.

A nationwide delivery network also facilitated by internet-ordering portals, is being built by firms such as UberEats and GrubHub. It now covers 30% of all restaurants, and coverage is projected to grow to 50% by 2025.

Frozen meals and entrees are improving and offer the most economical solution for time-pressured households.

Economies of scale and low labor costs per unit are the winning formula

The Hispanic opportunity is driven by growth. We expect Hispanics to grow from 17% to 21% of the U.S. population by 2030 and 28% by 2060. Understanding the rate of assimilation of Hispanics (fairly rapid), their language preferences for media and advertising (evolving more slowly), the degree to which they prefer different in-store marketing tools, their category preferences, and receptivity to private label brands are crucial for retailers and food manufacturers alike.

Many of the major food manufacturers have been responsive to the cross-over appeal of Hispanic-style foods to non-Hispanics, and have made a series of acquisitions over the past 30 years, including B&G Foods/Ortega, Campbells/Pace, ConAgra/Frontera, as well as the joint venture between Hormel and Herdez known as Megamex. A smaller number of Hispanic companies with roots in Mexico such as Gruma/Mission and Goya with roots in Puerto Rico have rapidly expanded with facilities in the U.S. and have concentrated on “authentic” items.

The study provides depth on:

The projected growth of Hispanics over the next 30 years, including by age group, to drive out their particular importance for products targeting children, adolescents, and teens.

How much of the growth in supermarket food and beverage sales will be driven by Hispanics: nearly 50%

The assimilation of Hispanics into the larger American society: which is ongoing on all cultural and language dimensions

How astute retailers are marketing in-store, and the role of websites and digital advertising in attracting and stimulating Hispanic consumers: more can be done on company websites and digital advertising

Private label relevance

The size and profitability of the Hispanic Food market: approximately $20 billion in supermarket sales

The major producers and marketers of Hispanic Foods: including the product lines and manufacturing facilities of Gruma/Mission (tortillas), Megamex/Hormel/Herdez (sauces, canned/jarred vegetables), General Mills/Old El Paso (meal kits, taco shells/seasonings), Goya (canned beans, dried beans, juices, sauces, and a myriad of other products)

The United States Private Label (PL) market for foods and beverages represents an estimated 20% of all retail grocery sales, and is expected to grow at a modest rate of a half percentage point of share per annum for the next several decades. Our study makes clear the drivers of this growth, variation by +64 categories, the approaches taken by the 12 major retail chains, and the profitability of PL manufacturers by category.

The drivers of PL growth are shown to be rising concentration of share among major chains (e.g. Walmart, Kroger, Albertsons) and share gains by discounters (Aldi, Lidl, etc.)

The share of PL by category varies from under 5% for snacks up to 60% for milk, and correlates with whether items in the category are standardized or have significant flavor/texture differences.

The PL branding architecture for each major retail chain is explored, from Walmart with one dominant PL brand, to Ahold with banner-specific offerings (Food Lion, Giant, Hannaford) supplemented by Nature’s Promise across all banners, to Albertson’s with five major PL brands across its banner stores, and very little PL offered under the banner names themselves. Aldi with 8 different major PL brands (and very little national brand presence) within a store has focused on benefits.

Operating profit margins for PL manufacturers vary by category, and while lower than national brands, follow the same pattern: lowest for commodities like milk/dairy (sub 5%) and higher for snacks with different flavor profiles (+14%) and distinctive sauces/salsas (17%).